The United Grand Lodge of England’s Special Interest Lodges (I think once known as affinity lodges) continue to proliferate. Joining Craft lodges comprised of lovers of beers & ales, aficionados of science fiction, fans of cricket & football, and many other options, is a potential “coffee lodge.”
Wednesday, July 8, 2026
‘Brotherhood of the bean’
The United Grand Lodge of England’s Special Interest Lodges (I think once known as affinity lodges) continue to proliferate. Joining Craft lodges comprised of lovers of beers & ales, aficionados of science fiction, fans of cricket & football, and many other options, is a potential “coffee lodge.”
Word percolated on social media this week:
Let’s brew a London coffee lodge. A new Masonic lodge bringing together baristas, coffee shop owners, those working in the coffee trade, and anyone with a genuine love of coffee. Whether you craft it, serve it, sell it, source it, roast it, or simply enjoy it, we invite you to register your interest and be part of something fresh, social, and full of flavor. Hit the link to register your interest.
In the replies is Bro. Jacob, who says: “Love that idea. Great possibilities for the Festive Board. A coffee tamper in place of a gavel could be fun too!”
I hope it works out. Maybe could mark a return of Masonic lodges to London’s coffee houses.
Now, let’s form a lodge of pipe smokers for brothers of the briar.
Labels:
affinity lodges,
coffee,
Special Interest Lodges,
UGLE
Tuesday, July 7, 2026
‘The author of our charges and prayers’
Born on this date in 1768:
Bro. Thaddeus Mason Harris!
Who?
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Magpie file photo Portrait of RW Thaddeus Mason Harris exhibited in the Boston Masonic Building. |
The clergyman, Harvard librarian, and first Grand Chaplain of the Grand Lodge of Masons in Massachusetts (nice resume) is the author of inspiring pieces of Craft lodge ritual familiar to—I think—most of the brethren in the United States, to wit: “You are now about to quit this sacred retreat of friendship and virtue…”
This has been embraced by grand lodges beyond the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and its phrasing varies a little from place to place. Here in New York we call it the Harris Charge, and it is a favorite among ritualists and all who value the meaning of Masonry. But that’s not all!
First, some biography.
Thaddeus Mason Harris was born July 7, 1768 in Charlestown, Massachusetts to William and Rebekah (Mason) Harris. He would be the eldest of seven children in a family that was uprooted by the Revolutionary War, literally having to abandon their home and possessions to walk to Choxet in 1775. His family in destitution and with his father dying in the winter of ’78, he had several homes during childhood.
In his preteen years, Harris lived with different families. At ten, he resided in Templeton with the minister of that town, and it was there where he became affected with a love of books. At eleven, he relocated to Shrewsbury and lived with a minister who provided a fatherly influence. At fourteen, he left for Cambridge with the goal of enrolling in the recently organized Harvard University. It wasn’t to be, yet, due to finance, so he returned to his remarried mother, now in Malden.
Unsuccessful in finding employment, his grandfather, Register of Deeds at Cambridge, made Thaddeus one of his secretaries. There, he befriended a minster who encouraged him to enter college, and, in 1783, Harris enrolled in Harvard. Truly a kind of existence that would be popularized a century later in the stories of Horatio Alger.
Harris was eulogized by his successor as pastor of The First Church of Dorchester, Rev. Nathaniel Hall, who related this story:
...he set off to meet his mother, as by previous arrangement, in Boston; having nothing, in possession or prospect, but a few coppers which he had transferred from his trunk to his pocket as he left his room; and these—so strong were his benevolent sympathies—he gave to a poor crippled soldier that he met on his way, and who, faint and famishing, solicited his aid. As he went on, deeply depressed at his destitute condition and in despair at his seeming fate, he perceived something adhering to the end of his rude staff he had cut on the way; and found it to be a gold ring, into which his staff had struck itself as he walked, and having engraved upon it the words “God speed thee, friend,” its pecuniary worth proving sufficient for his present exigency; and its moral value, incalculable; helping to clothe him in what he felt he needed a cheerful faith and confidence in God. The whole incident, acting upon his sensitive nature, and predisposed as he was to see in everything which befell him a peculiar and sacred significance, subdued and overwhelmed him; and appears to have given to his character a stronger religious determination. “That motto,” in his own words, “has ever been the support of my faith when it was feeble, and the strength of my heart when it was faint.”
He graduated Harvard in 1787 (in the same class as John Quincy Adams, who would become an avid anti-Mason forty years later). After Harvard, Harris spent a year working at a school in Worcester, but returned to the university to pursue theological studies. Harvard appointed him its Librarian in 1791, and he served for two years before being ordained as Unitarian minister of the First Parish Church in Dorchester, from which he retired in 1836. He earned a Doctorate of Theological Studies from Harvard in 1813. He died April 3, 1842 at Dorchester, and is buried in the Old North Burying Place in Uphams Corner, Dorchester.
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| RW Benjamin Huntoon |
Of the many incidents in his early life; the precocious developement of talents, which gave promise of intellectual eminence the ardent thirst for knowledge, and the almost instinctive acquisition of learning, which attracted the admiration, and secured the patronage of strangers as well as friends—and those signal instances of the remarkable, if not miraculous smiles of a gracious Providence upon his orphanage—and the encouraging tokens of Divine aid in his despondency, which always kept alive a fervent glow of pious gratitude in his heart, and spread the brilliancy of hope upon every gathering cloud of after discouragement, like the bow of promise, that brightens athwart the lowering tempest, and bid “God speed” to his every literary effort and holy enterprise, of these, and the numberless vernal blossoms of that delicate constitution of mind, which ripened into so mellow a harvest of unassuming goodness of that tender sensibility, which seemed like a lid, “which God had placed over the eye of his soul to guard its holy crystal from impurity”—time will permit me to say nothing. These are details, which belong to the biographer, rather than the eulogist….The writings of Dr. Harris in the departments of Literature and Natural History, Theology, Biography, and Antiquity will form a solid and durable monument of his claims to public esteem and gratitude. They deservedly hold a conspicuous rank and occupy a large space in our National literature. His Natural History of the Bible, a work of great learning, diligent and extensive reading, has met with an honorable reception, and passed through several editions in England.... As a Scholar, a Naturalist, Antiquarian, and a Divine, the memory of Dr. Harris will go down to posterity with enduring esteem and lasting reputation. As a man, in the social relations of obliging neighbor, entertaining associate, and facetious companion for he had a vein of good humored wit and innocent pleasantry—Dr. Harris has left a pattern of amiable excellence, of which it is difficult to speak too favorably, and which will not soon be forgotten, by a large circle of acquaintances, extending from Maine to Georgia.As the kind Pastor, the religious counsellor, the sympathizing friend, in all the varying “lights and shadows” of ministerial trial and duty, he exhibited a heart full and overflowing, with the milk of human kindness and fellow-feeling. Most truly did he “rejoice with those that rejoiced, and wept with those that wept.” In his every look and deportment there was manifested a singleness of intention, a simplicity of purpose, a gentleness of spirit, a patience of love, and a meekness of charity, of rare attainment on earth. In his manners, there was an affability, frankness and child-like sincerity which won the affection and confidence of all who approached him. His very countenance seemed radiant with the pure benedictions of a generous, disinterested soul, communicating instinctively its gladness or its gloom to every beholder the faithful mirror of all the workings and emotions the cloud and sunshine of the inner man.In his study, there was an arrangement, a classification, an order, in every department of intellectual pursuit, of learning, and of business, which enabled him to avail himself of all his stores of knowledge, and of interest, with the greatest facility and the most indubitable exactness. “He had literally a place for every thing, and every thing in its place.” This, with his constant and most assiduous employment of time, enabled him to perform an amount of literary labor, and practical good works, truly astonishing, considering his many interruptions from sickness and constitutional debility….This exclusive and appropriate service cannot be deemed obtrusive or uncalled for by any who “would live respected, or die regretted” by their fellow travelers to that country “from whose bourne no traveler returns.”The elevated rank, the conspicuous station, which Dr. Harris held in the various departments and distinguished offices of the Masonic household; the many important services which he rendered by his talents and his virtues, by his active labors, and personal sacrifices, entitle him to the full meed of Masonic gratitude and love. He was an ardent, consistent, steadfast Mason. He brought the energy of his gifted mind—the patronage of his immaculate reputation and the weight of his personal character—as a willing offering to the altar of Freemasonry—for which generous oblation, he has received, and will ever receive, the respect and veneration of the Fraternity through all coming time. His first great Masonic work was the editing of a collation, revision and publication of the Constitutions of the Ancient and Honorable Fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons, a quarto volume, printed at Worcester, Mass., 1792. A work which he accomplished with the accustomed diligence, and “known fidelity” with which he performed every enterprise confided to his care. His various, occasional addresses, while Grand Chaplain of the Grand Lodge—his Masonic defenses—anonymous tracts and his volume of Masonic Discourses, published in 1801, constitute a large part, and valuable portion of the Masonic classic literature of America. They contain a faithful and dispassionate exhibition of our principles, in that chaste and captivating style, that graceful and easy diction, that forcible and earnest language which characterize all the productions, which he has given to the public. They are a rich legacy to our Fraternity from an accomplished mind, a ripe scholar, and an intelligent Mason, and they will connect his name and his memory with whatever is dear and hallowed in our recollections of his amiable virtues and personal endowments….
Front cover of RW Huntoon’s eulogy.
In the Masonic heart he will be held in undying remembrance—with the immortality of the affections. In that simple memorial, of the justly appreciated services, which he had rendered to the cause of Freemasonry, in the capacities of Grand Chaplain, and Corresponding Grand Secretary, given by the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts, A. L. 5816, this sentiment is forcibly expressed in the touching inscription: Memoria tenemus, quæ non remunerare possumus. (Memory shall retain a sense of obligation which we can never remunerate.)In the fiery ordeal, that inquisition of prejudice, that hurricane of malignity, through which our Institution has been forced to pass, Dr. Harris was firm and unshaken. From his age, his character, his profession, and high standing in Society, he was selected as a prominent mark for the shafts of anti-masonic proscription and vituperation. His extreme susceptibility to the veriest breath of censure, his shrinking delicacy of feeling at every rough accent of reproach, made this attack the more unmanly, not to say cowardly. He was frequently insulted by printed papers sent to him, containing the most scurrilous abuse of his character, as a Christian and a minister of the gospel, because he would not, with the vaunting, self-styled champions of religion, piety, and patriotism, renounce our time-hallowed Institution—whose principles he had early espoused, whose patrons he deeply revered, whose members he sincerely loved, whose generous philanthropy, and expansive charity accorded with the native feelings and instinctive promptings of his large, noble, and humane heart, his Brotherly Love, and universal good will to man. His whole character was the complete impersonation of Masonic benevolence. His only prayer, for his most abusive traducers, was “Father forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
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| Title page of 1819 edition printed in Philadelphia. |
To really get to know Harris, I recommend to all thinking Freemasons his book Discourses, Delivered on Public Occasions, Illustrating the Principles, Displaying the Tendency, and Vindicating the Design, of Free Masonry, first printed in 1801. There’s a lot he shares in its more than 350 pages. Chapter 1, for instance, recalls the Charges of a Freemason in Anderson’s Constitutions, but benefits from generations of hindsight and from Harris’ wise counsel. He’s simply more instructive and specific.
This book includes several items you may have memorized during your tenure as a Freemason, such as:
The Ancient Prayer,
at making or Opening.
Most holy and glorious Lord God, the great Architect of the Universe; the giver of all good gifts and graces: Thou hast promised, that where two or three are gathered together in thy name, thou wilt be in the midst of them. In thy name we assemble, most humbly beseeching thee to bless us in all our undertakings, that we may know and serve thee aright, and that all our actions may tend to thy glory, and to our advancement in knowledge and virtue.
*And we beseech thee, O Lord God, to bless this our present assembling; and grant that this our new Brother may prove true and faithful. Endue him with a competency of thy divine wisdom, that he may, with the secrets of Free Masonry, be able to unfold the mysteries of godliness. And may he and we walk in the light of thy countenance; and when the trials of our probationary state are over, be admitted into the Temple not made with hands, eternal in the heavens ! — Amen.
*This paragraph is to be omitted, except when a candidate is about to be initiated.
A prayer used at opening a Lodge.
May the favor of Heaven be upon this meeting; and as it is happily begun, may it be conducted with order, and closed with harmony. Amen.
A Prayer used at closing the Lodge.
May the blessing of Heaven rest upon us, and all regular masons! May brotherly love prevail, and every moral and social virtue cement us! — Amen.
And, of course, our Harris Charge (a longer form than what you might know):
Charge at the Closing of a Lodge
You are now to quit this sacred retreat of friendship and virtue, to mix again with the world. Amidst its concerns and employments, forget not the duties you have heard so frequently inculcated, and forcibly recommended in this Lodge. Be, therefore, diligent, prudent, temperate, discreet. Remember also, that around this altar you have solemnly and repeatedly promised to befriend and relieve, with unhesitating cordiality, so far as shall be in your power, every brother who shall need your assistance: That you have promised to remind him, in the most tender manner, of his failings, and aid his reformation. Vindicate his character when wrongfully traduced. Suggest in his behalf the most candid, favourable, and paliating circumstances, when his conduct is justly reprehended. That the world may observe how Masons love one another.
These generous principles are to extend farther. Every human being has a claim upon your kind offices. So that we enjoin it upon you “to do good unto all,” while we recommend it more “especially to the household of the faithful.”
By diligence in the duties of your respective callings, by liberal benevolence, and diffusive charity, by constancy and fidelity in your friendships, by uniformly just, amiable, and virtuous deportment, discover the beneficial and happy effects of this ancient and honorable institution.
Let it not be supposed that you have here labored in vain, and spent your strength for nought; for your work is with the Lord, and your recompense with your God.
Finally, brethren, farewell. Be ye all of one mind. Live in peace. And may the God of love and peace delight to dwell with and to bless you!
I’ll close this long edition of The Magpie Mason with what I consider an oddity:
A Prayer, said at the opening
of a Lodge,
or making a new brother used
by Jewish Free Masons.
O Lord, excellent art thou in thy truth, there is nothing great in comparison to thee; for thine is the praise, from all the works of thy hands, for evermore.
Enlighten us, we beseech thee, in the true knowledge of Masonry: by the sorrows of Adam, thy first made man; by the blood of Abel, thy holy one; by the righteousness of Seth, in whom thou art well pleased; and by thy covenant with Noah, in whose architecture thou wast pleased to save the seed of thy beloved; number us not among those that know not thy statutes, nor the divine mysteries of the secret Cabbala.
But grant, we beseech thee, that the ruler of this Lodge may be endued with knowledge and wisdom, to instruct us, and explain his secret mysteries, as our holy brother Moses did (in his Lodge) to Aaron, Eleazar and Ithamar (the sons of Aaron) and the seventy elders of Israel.
And grant that we may understand, learn, and keep all the statutes and commandments of the Lord, and this holy mystery, pure and undented unto our lives end. Amen, Lord.
Monday, July 6, 2026
‘A most respected Craftsman to preside over the lodge’
From time immemorial, it has been an established custom among Masons for each lodge once in every year, at a stated period, to select from among its members a Past Warden, a most respected Craftsman, to preside over the lodge in the capacity of Master.Installation of OfficersGrand Lodge of New York
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| In the Colonial Room. |
At The American Lodge of Research, and research lodges generally, one cannot be merely a Past Warden, but must be a Past Master already to be installed into the Solomonic Chair. The reasons for this vary from the legalistic (secrets of the Chair) to the practical (the need for someone who knows what he’s doing). At The ALR last Wednesday, we elected, installed, and beheld W. Bro. Michael, our Worshipful Master for this year.
A recent PM of Hellenic-Plato 1129, Michael has charted our course. “Our lodge is founded on the belief that the search for knowledge is an essential part of the Masonic journey,” he said. “Through research, discussion, lectures, and publications, we seek not only to preserve our heritage, but also to deepen our understanding of the principles that continue to guide our Craft today. Whether you are a seasoned Masonic scholar, a Brother beginning your first research project, or simply someone interested in learning more about Freemasonry, you will find a welcoming community committed to intellectual curiosity, respectful dialogue, and the exchange of ideas. As we look to the future, we remain dedicated to fostering meaningful research, encouraging new voices, and contributing to the broader body of Masonic scholarship. By studying our past and examining our traditions with honesty and care, we help ensure that the light of Freemasonry continues to inspire future generations.”
Upcoming Stated Communications (at Masonic Hall):
Tuesday, October 27
Tuesday, March 30
Tuesday June 29
Additionally, our “away game” meeting, when we venture outside of Masonic Hall and Manhattan, may possibly be at a lodge in the Queens District. We’re working on the details. I can’t say I’ve ever attended lodge in Queens.
Before any of these, we will meet via Zoom on Saturday, August 8 to host David Dixon Goodwin, who will reprise his talk from our October 2025 meeting for the benefit of our members around the globe.
And, I’m sure, we’ll hold another festive board one night.
The ALR was chartered by Grand Lodge in 1931. Grand Master Charles Johnson, who served as
the research lodge’s first Master, charged this lodge “to debunk Masonic history,” meaning to
seek the truth of our fraternity’s past and correct the legends and inaccuracies that Masons had
accepted as their history.
It could be said the roots of The ALR date to 1909, when Grand Master Nelson Sawyer
received the report from the Committee on Jurisprudence which communicated the desire of
eight Master Masons (mostly Past DDGMs) to form a “Historical Lodge that will have for its purposes the investigation
of the History, Philosophy, Symbolism, Jurisprudence, and other general subjects pertaining to
Freemasonry that will tend to the enlightenment of the Craft and provide a center and bond of
union for Masonic students who desire to work for the benefits of Freemasonry.” (The following
year, the Committee recommended against creating such a lodge.)
Many thanks to MW Bill Sardone for presiding over both the elections and the installation. You’d think a room full of PMs would be able manage, but I guess not yet.
Sunday, July 5, 2026
‘Write a Short Talk Bulletin’
Well, maybe not you, but they are looking for original copy, of 1,200 to 1,500 words, written as a talk to be given in lodge, on a subject related to Freemasonry. Those are the criteria Mark gave me.
While I wouldn’t put words in his mouth, I’ll add that esoteric talks on UFOs, Mary Magdalene, kundalini, et al. probably wouldn’t make it into print.
You know what a Short Talk Bulletin is. Write one. Send it to Mark Tabbert here.
Saturday, July 4, 2026
‘The Elements of Life’
Oklahoma Masonic Indian Degree Team’s gavel.
Masonry endeavors to instruct men about the elements of life that are worthwhile and have lasting value; to teach of the relationship in which men should stand, one to another; and to impart the lesson that he who gives the best and richest in himself to those around him, receives the very same in return, with added measure. A Masonic Lodge is a gathering of men who believe in Creator and society; men who uphold the principles and ideals revealed in the Volumes of Sacred Law; and men who promote the universal ideals of liberty, equality, and freedom.
Installation of OfficersGrand Lodge of New York
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| Great flying weather, but four flights in thirty-three hours was a workout for me. (I find American is better than United.) |
Cripes, now I know how Craddock feels!
The Magpie Mason recently undertook a whirlwind tour of the Midwest, flying to and from Tulsa, Oklahoma by way of four airports in about thirty-three hours. I’m an infrequent flier, so this was a workout for me, but it was totally worth it, having been able to attend the Joint Traditional Observance Lodge Festive Board on St. John’s Day. This, the third annual event, is sponsored by the four Traditional Observance lodges in Oklahoma: Guildhall Lodge 553, Veritas 556, Vitruvian 557, and Providence 558.
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| At Oaks Country Club in Tulsa. |
Our host on St. John’s Day was Vitruvian, whose Worshipful Master, David Dill, contacted me last year to ask if I might be available to serve as speaker at a not-yet-defined event in 2026. I shouted Yes!, with uncharacteristic enthusiasm. I figured I’d be forgotten or replaced with a better choice before too much time passed, but there I was at Oaks Country Club, after some time assessing the qualities of several area craft beers with David and others at McNellie’s South. (I wouldn’t say day drinking makes me a better speaker, but it lets me not mind it so much.)
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| Brethren donated top shelf stuff for auction. |
It was a great night. Festive is the operative word in Festive Board, and the great food, quaffable beer, wine for toasts, and camaraderie ensured a convivial evening. Our ritual had been sourced from a few places, including London, where David once visited twelve lodges in two weeks(!), with each hosting a Festive Board. And there was singing. The usual tunes, plus “Viva la Compagnie!” We had the room only a few hours, so brevity was key; I kept my remarks at the lectern to about twenty minutes. Titled “The Elements of Life,” this new talk extolled the value of tradition in Freemasonry. That could cover many areas, but I zeroed in on certain things we think, say, and do in our lodges.
That excerpt at top, from our New York Installation of Officers, talks specifically about our relationships to each other and to God as upholders of a free society. I thought it apt, as Independence Day neared. That gavel belongs to the Oklahoma Masonic Indian Degree Team, which was well represented that night by W. Dill and others.
(If you are wondering about the T.O. term, that’s how they like it in Oklahoma. In New York, we designate such lodges as O.M., for Observant Masonry, echoing the Masonic Restoration Foundation. For me, the terminology is less important than the best practices, as culled from our rituals, orations, jurisprudence, etc., that should guide lodges.)
I got to shake hands with MW Robert G. Davis for the first time in a long while. Bob spoke first, rendering a spiritual introduction to St. John Baptist Day in relation to our place in the cosmos via the summer solstice. I didn’t know he was to precede me, and I felt terrible having to contradict him when it was my turn to speak.
I broached the topic of tradition by explaining how sometimes they get started in ways we today do not remember. I relayed Pete Normand’s explanation of how June 24 became an occasion of Masonic feasting. (Pete, I hope you don’t mind, but I urged the Master of next year’s host lodge to book you as speaker for this event.) In short, June 24 was one of four Quarter Days, holidays throughout the year when everyone was off from work. However, the saint we read about in the Old Charges is St. Alban, who looked after masons in England during the third century. Meanwhile, neither Saint John is found anywhere in that vast body of literature penned between the fourteenth and eighteenth centuries. Alban’s feast day is June 22, not the day off from work everyone got in 1717, so he was supplanted with St. John the Baptist for convenience.
If that thinking lacks gravitas to you, as today is Independence Day, for another hour, in the United States, I’ll point out another two-day discrepancy: July 2 was the date in 1776 when the Second Continental Congress voted to declare “That these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States, that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain is, and ought to be, totally dissolved.” July 2 was the date John Adams predicted “will be celebrated, by succeeding Generations, as the great anniversary Festival… It ought to be solemnized with Pomp and Parade with shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this continent to the other from this Time forward forever more.” Yet, here we are every Fourth of July.
I have found how, when we study history enough, we realize inevitabilities, like truth can be stranger than fiction. Other times, coincidences become visible in hindsight, and that sometimes “you can’t make this stuff up.” And, especially, there are instances when the simple explanation works best.
In contrast, here are Faceypage posts in reply to someone’s innocuous St. John’s Day message:
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| Wut. |
Not everybody plummets down this kind of rabbit hole, but, when a less-than-obvious explanation of something simple takes root, some will explore tangents that lead even further from tradition. Thanks to Pete, I think Masonry’s standard accepted Holy Saints John-parallel lines-solstices theory represents an accretion of ideas that doesn’t withstand scrutiny. It never made sense to me, but it became our tradition.
But my main point in Tulsa was to note a few traditions in what we think, say, and do in our lodges.
For this, I covered territory familiar to regular readers of this website. I think understanding this material is very important—they are “elements of life”—namely:
‣ The centrality to Freemasonry of belief in God, as presented in Charge I of Anderson’s Constitutions, which lives on today in many grand lodges’ law books; in the meaning of our term Great Architect of the Universe, borrowed from John Calvin; and in Anderson’s history of the fraternity, beginning with Adam, “who taught his sons Geometry.”
‣ How Masons of diverse religious opinions coexist by “leaving their particular opinions to themselves” and allowing Masonry to be “the center of union.”
‣ How a Mason is peaceful “to the civil powers, wherever he resides and works,” upholding a tradition dating to the time of Henry VI.
‣ How we, as Masons, subdue our passions and improve ourselves, in a tradition that takes us back to Plato.
‣ And more.
I rarely feel positively about my speaking engagements, but this one went well. I was alarmed by the lack of Q&A (always a bad sign), but a number of the brethren took me aside near the end of the night to thank me for specific points in the talk. I’ll take it.
I even met a brother from Independent Royal Arch 2. I spotted his lodge necktie, and we chatted about New York and Masonic Week.
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| Vivat! Vivat! Vivat! |
In souvenirs, I made out like a bandit, scoring not only the evening’s official beer glass and English-made firing glass, but also one brother’s gift to me of his personal Guildhall 553 firing glass, plus an Oklahoma Masonic Indian Degree Team coin. And I managed to get all that fragile glass home intact.
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| Obverse of Oklahoma Masonic Indian Degree Team’s coin. The state is rendered in red because ‘Oklahoma’ derives from the Choctaw language, meaning ‘red people’ or ‘red nation.’ |
I wished I could have stuck around longer, maybe just another day to visit the Woody Guthrie and Bob Dylan museums, see some of Route 66, and try the smoked bologna (talk about elements of life!) at Big Daddy’s. I’ll have to get back some time.
I lack the talent to join that top tier of Masonic thinkers who regularly travel the country on the lecture circuit, but it is flattering to be invited and receive the red carpet treatment. My next turn at the lectern will be “across the river to the Jersey side” to discuss the Anti-Masonic Party in New Jersey at the research lodge on September 12, the 200th anniversary of the alleged disappearance of William Morgan. No singing and drinking there, I’m told.
Friday, July 3, 2026
‘Academy speakers announced’
With temperatures here today exceeding 100 degrees Fahrenheit, imagine, if you will, a clear crisp autumn day at the bucolic Masonic Village in Elizabethtown. Trees are turning orange and yellow. Seth and Austin toss a football on the Green before heading inside for a spot of mulled apple cider.
Anyway, on Saturday, October 24, Roger will be one of the speakers there when the Pennsylvania Academy of Masonic Knowledge hosts its Fall Symposium!
Yes, another Knights of the North alum will take to the lectern, when MW Roger VanGorden, Past Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Indiana, will present “If Thomas Smith Webb Had a Chatbot: Speculative Masonry Meets Artificial Intelligence.”
Sharing the double bill will be MW R. Stephen Doan, Past Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of California, who will discuss “Exploring William Preston’s Illustrations of Masonry.”
More information, as always, can be found on the webpage here.
Don’t forget, if you cannot attend, the Academy does stream on YouTube.
Thursday, July 2, 2026
‘At last: The Book M’
The 2026 volume, announced by the MBC and Arturo de Hoyos yesterday, will be William Smith’s The Book M, or Masonry Triumphant from 1736. I’ve wanted my own printed copy of this an awfully long time. I first encountered a mention of this title in Chetwode Crawley’s Caementaria Hibernica, itself reprinted by the MBC long ago, where it was described as an important source of Masonic theory—and even as “hortatory.” And then it came up again elsewhere. Then again over time, while remaining elusive on the web. I have not been able to include this on my list of the Masonic essential books without reading it, but always suspected it merits inclusion.
In a paper on the subject of Smith and this book, the late John Belton of QC2076 writes:
In 1736 there was another William Smith production: Book M: Or Masonry Triumphant. Suddenly the moral and ethical values of Freemasonry appear in an extended readable and spoken form. One might possibly think of this as the contribution from the northeast of England to Freemasonry! And from that part of England that worked the Harodim degrees. That is the opinion of Professor Jan Snoek and increasingly I think he is correct. The oratorical tradition in Masonry
came from the northeast of England.
Crawley, Lionel Vibert, and others have written of the similarities of The Book M to Smith’s Pocket Companion from 1735. Belton attributes to that book what your lodge might call the Entered Apprentice Charge, saying:
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| John Belton |
So I’m hooked just for the opportunity to read the early text of that charge. With a $40 price tag, we’ll be paying almost a buck a page for this reproduction of The Book M, but of course an MBC printing will include explanatory text. Take my money, please!
From the publicity:
In the decades following the formation of the Premier Grand Lodge of England in 1717 and the publication of James Anderson’s The Constitutions of the Free-Masons (1723), Freemasonry was undergoing both consolidation and public exposure. William Smith’s The Book M or, Masonry Triumphant (1736), participated in this transition by offering a blend of history, ritual elements, and songs which reflected the increasing literate and social mobility of the Craft’s membership.
The Book M is essentially a “Pocket Companion” augmented with original commentary on Northern English Masonry, “Memorables,” and ceremonial observations. This dual format, part historical narrative plus musical/occasional material, informed and entertained brethren as well as promoting a positive self-image of the fraternity. The author was likely the same William Smith who was initiated at Swalwell Lodge (Lodge of Industry 48) in 1733.
Internal evidence suggests that The Book M represents the traditions of the “Harodim,” an early form of Masonry distinct from the “Moderns” (post-1717) and “Ancients” (post-1752). Some scholars suggest that the Harodim encompassed ritual elements later found in other high degrees, such as the Rose Croix, the Passing of the Bridge, and the Mark, Ark, and Link ceremonies. However, historical records indicate that the Harodim was primarily a lecture-based assembly. It preserved some of the older traditions of Masonry, including Noah and the Flood, the Tower of Babel, Enoch’s Columns, and the construction of Solomon’s Temple as part of the Fraternity’s mythology.
Although published in a relatively large edition, surviving copies are quite rare, with fewer than ten known to exist. This attractive Masonic Book Club edition, which was re-typeset for clarity, preserves the pagination and some of the engravings of the original. Some of the engravings have been reproduced or reimagined. A new introduction by Arturo de Hoyos adds a historical context and frames the book within the traditional works of the Craft.
Getting back to Chetwode Crawley and Caementaria Hibernica, he humorously writes: “The enigmatical title of The Book M, was doubtless designed to excite curiosity. It stands among the earliest instances of that affection for the clair-obscur, which has now and again led Masonic writers into stringing together long rows of initials. It has been suggested that M stands for Mystic, or for Mirific, or for Microcosmic, or for Megalocosmic, or for a host of words, each a little longer than its superseded predecessor in the list. The irreverent reader will miss the wonder-working Mesopotamian.”
Advance orders will be accepted starting Monday and through August 6. If enough orders are received, the books will be printed and shipped to us in the fall. (Conversely, if that threshold is not reached, we’ll get our money back, so click here and think positive.)
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
‘California conference call for papers’
The deadline is August 1, so I thought I should share this information again.
The 15th International Conference on Freemasonry is set for March 6, 2027. Hosted by the Masons of California, it’ll be back in Los Angeles, this time at the UCLA Faculty Club. Its theme: “Scotland and Freemasonry: The High Road, the Low Road, and the Road Less Traveled.”
Organizers issued the call for papers:
“We are now accepting proposals for academic paper presentations for the 15th International Conference on Freemasonry, sponsored by the Grand Lodge of California and the California Masonic Foundation. Topics are open, but should be closely matched to the theme of the conference. Successful proposals will adhere to academic standards of original research and composition, and pursue original analyses. Please send curriculum vitae and 500-word proposal to Susan Mitchell Sommers here.”
Send in your précis!
Kudos to whoever devised the conference title. “The high road” and “the low road” call to mind the Scottish folk song “The Bonnie Banks o’ Loch Lomond;” while “the road less traveled” naturally reminds us of “The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost, a California native and son of a Scottish immigrant mother.
And March 6, for that matter, is the Feast Day of St. Baldred, a hermit (therefore dear to my heart) of the eighth century who came to be known as the Apostle of the Lothians.
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
‘Grotto going to Great Jones distillery’
Grotto News You Can Use
Azim Grotto—The Handsomest Grotto in the Realm™️—will gather next Tuesday for a tour of a local distillery. From the publicity:
Azim Grotto 7
Tuesday, July 7
Meeting at 6:30 ▴ Distillery Tour at 7:30
686 Broadway, NYC
$45 per person
After the brief meeting for Prophets only, the tour is open to Prophets, friends, family members, and guests age 21 and over.
Important: You must RSVP and pay in advance to guarantee your spot on the tour. Space is limited, and the distillery requires a final count prior to the event. To RSVP and submit payment, contact the Zachretary here.
Join us for an evening of fellowship, fine spirits, and good company as we explore New York City’s first legal whiskey distillery since Prohibition.
Sympathy and Good Fellowship,
Joe McMillen
Prophet Monarch
There will be more Lucky Seven events through the year, but looking at September, the Empire State Grotto Association will sojourn to New Jersey for its Fall Convention.
Details still to come, but click here to book your room no later than August 19.
Monday, June 29, 2026
‘Annual St. John’s/St. Alban’s gathering’
If you’re lucky, you look forward to all your Masonic gatherings. (The secret is to purge your calendar of events that don’t do “it” for you.) Saturday, the annual huddle of New Jersey research lodge guys happened at The Cranbury Inn, our usual haunt.
Invitations went out, but only four of us could make it for a square meal and brainy conversation. It’s our St. John Baptist Day Luncheon (I think of it as St. Alban’s Day Luncheon) for the stalwart supporters of New Jersey Lodge of Masonic Research and Education 1786. We went four hours, finally wrapping it up at five o’clock, as the dinner crowd began taking over the place.
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| The Cranbury Inn strives to display an adequate number of Washington portraits and firearms... |
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| …and, in my opinion, they come fairly close. |
Conversation ranged from lamenting the cancellation of this year’s John Skene Masonic Conference to upcoming conferences in California and Cambridge to the benefits of authors achieving a balance of historical overview and experiential knowledge of the Craft to the bizarre sexual content of a novel, supposedly based on the Hiramic Drama, penned recently by a New Jersey Mason. And a lot more. (Someone pitched the idea of Magpie Mason merch! So look for Magpie T-shirts, trucker hats, tote bags, pens, key rings, koozies, etc. in time for Christmas.)
In the mid-1600s in the center of the colony of New Jersey by Cranberry Creek, a mill town began to develop along an old Indian trail that had widened into a road. This road connected the colonies and was becoming a main thoroughfare for colonial travelers. In 1697 Cranberry Towne received its charter from England. With increasing development, a need arose in central New Jersey for a place to eat and drink, get fresh horses, and spend the night; thus, in the mid-1700s (1750 and 1765) our taverns were built to meet these needs of the travelers passing through this area.
After the colonies declared their independence from the motherland, this business officially established itself in 1780. What is now The Cranbury Inn has been functioning as a place to eat and drink since the 1750s.
In the year 1800 Hannah Disbrow Dey & Peter Perrine were married in the Presbyterian Church across the street from The Cranbury Inn. Middlesex County Courthouse records tell us “they built as their home the house that is now The Cranbury Inn.” Their house was built across the front of our two original taverns built in 1750 and 1765, thus further developing and upgrading their business.
Rev. William S. Hall, their grandson-in-law, was a Quaker and a declared abolitionist, the time frame of which seems to coordinate well with the date the New Jersey state historian put on the conversion/remodeling of a flue space on the east wall of our oldest tavern. This converted flue space is an alleged slave hiding space from the days when what is now The Cranbury Inn was an alleged stop on the underground railroad...
Read more here.
It’s a lot of driving for all of us, but we really enjoy it. I wouldn’t mind if we added a St. Andrew or St. John Evangelist celebration.
Labels:
Cranbury Inn,
NJLORE,
St. Alban,
St. John the Baptist
Sunday, June 28, 2026
‘Rubicon’s 14th annual festive board and conference’
| Click to enlarge. |
It’s official: The Rubicon Masonic Society’s fourteenth annual festive board and conference is set for the weekend of August 14 in Kentucky.
The graphic above has all the details, but click here to get started.
Having attended last year’s lucky thirteenth annual, I heartily endorse this event. It’s a 1,500-mile round trip for me, so I won’t be able to get there, but if the commute is easier for you, please go. Do it for me and all who cannot be there. You’ll love the fellowship, ambiance, and the content of the discussions.
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